Seagate ships self-encrypting drives for enterprises

By Lucas Mearian, Computerworld |  Storage, hard drive, Seagate Technology 1 comment

Seagate Technology LLC today announced it is shipping its Seagate self-encrypting drive (SED) across its portfolio of enterprise-class hard drives.

The hard drives included with the self-encrypting option are the Savvio 15K.2, Savvio 10K.3, Constellation and Cheetah 15K.7 drives.

Seagate has offered full disk encryption to consumers since 2007 and to enterprises in its lower-end Momentus 5400 drive .

Seagate is aiming its new high-end SED option at corporations and organizations faced with regulatory oversight in the health care and financial services arena, which requires customer data to have a higher level of security. "With 50,000 drives and terabytes of data leaving organizations daily, and because 90% of the drives returned for warranty contain readable data, safe drive retirement is a key imperative for businesses worldwide," Seagate said in a statement."

Eric Ouellet, a vice president of storage research at Gartner Inc., said self-encrypting drives are one of the easiest, most cost-effective security measures companies can implement, providing protection against breaches that can occur in drives and systems "that have been repurposed, decommissioned, disposed of, sent for repair, misplaced or stolen."

"Because all disk media eventually leaves a company's control, the use of SEDs ensures that data is protected at these critical stages of a system's life cycle," Ouellet said in a statement.

Seagate has also partnered with Intel Corp. and LSI Corp. to integrate its SEDs with the companies' local encryption key management and TCG-based security technology in their processors and server network interface cards. Resellers and system integrators can build out more secure system architectures "that are strong enough for national security, yet easy enough for the one-person IT department to manage," Seagate stated.

"Using an Intel server board, such as Intel Server Board S5520HC, with a new Intel RAID Controller RS2BL080 and Seagate's self-encrypting drives, allows data-at-rest to be natively secure at the disk drives themselves," David Brown, general manager of channel server products at Intel, said in a statement.

1 comment

    Anonymous 2 years ago
    Thought you might like to know about this..

      Add a comment

      Post a comment using one of these accounts
      Or join now
      At least 6 characters

      Note: Comment will appear soon after you have activated your account.
      Obscene/spam comments will be removed and accounts suspended.
      The information you submit is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

      ITworld LIVE

      StorageWhite Papers & Webcasts

      White Paper

      ESG ~ HP StoreOnce: the Next Wave of Data Deduplication

      Leveraging deduplication in backup environments yields significant advantages. The cost savings in reducing disk capacity requirements change the economics of disk-based backup. For some organizations, it allows disk-based backup-and, importantly, recovery-to be extended to additional workloads in the environment. For others, deduplication makes it possible to introduce disk-based backup where it may not have been feasible before.

      White Paper

      Evaluator Group: Storage Federation - IT Without Limits (Analysis of HP Peer Motion with Storage Federation)

      As the role of IT increases within organizations, the need to move data when and where it is needed is critical to support emerging business requirements. This has become increasingly difficult due to the huge growth of data volumes. This white paper sponsored by HP + Intel evaluates a solution that aims to enable the movement of data without physical limitations. Read now and see how this could enable agility and efficiency.

      White Paper

      HP Converged Storage Sets the Stage for the Next Era of Computing

      Enterprise storage has undergone many changes in recent years - with converged storage and infrastructure 2.0 paving the way for reduced IT infrastructure costs and greater performance. This report discusses the latest trends that are setting the stage for the next era of computing. Learn about the new infrastructure and storage trends that are changing the way business storage works today.

      White Paper

      AppAssure vs Acronis

      In this study of data protection for environments with virtual and physical servers running Windows, openBench Labs tested AppAssure Backup and Replication software v 4.7 and Acronis Backup & Recovery 11. Both solutions utilize block-based technology to unify data protection operations.

      White Paper

      Guaranteeing 100% Backup Recovery

      The single biggest challenge for IT personnel involved in the data protection process is making sure that their backups are recoverable every time. Management and users won't remember the ninety-nine successful recoveries but they will always remember the one failure.

      See more White Papers | Webcasts

      Ask a question

      Ask a Question